PSYC 1300 Exam 2
Important elements of classical conditioning
- Learning to associate two stimuli and thus to anticipate events - Exhibiting respondent behavior
What does the text say about the age group 18 to mid-20s in western cultures? What might be one of the characteristics of their behavior?
- called emerging adulthood - they may feel in between adolescence and adulthood - they may manage their own time and priorities, but from their parents' home - they may still be financially and emotionally dependent - they may remain on their parents' health insurance until 26
Approximately __ children in the United States show visible effects of fetal alcohol disorder.
1 in 30
Piaget's Stages of Development
1. sensorimotor 2. preoperational 3. concrete operational 4. formal operational
_% of American parents believe that sometimes children need to be spanked.
60%?
What is the difference between a fixed schedule and a variable schedule?
A fixed schedule uses a fixed amount of responses or time. A variable schedule happens unpredictably. Variable schedules yield more consistent responses than fixed schedules.
If a person uses Luminosity, what might they expect to be the results/what benefits are they trying to get?
A person who uses Luminosity is trying to slow down cognitive aging and improve memory, visual tracking, and problem solving. However, Luminosity does not improve overall cognitive performance as it only improves performance on the trained tasks.
What is the difference between a ratio and interval schedule?
A ratio schedule is linked to the number of responses. An interval schedule is linked to the time between responses. Ratio schedules give higher response rates than interval schedules.
What is the difference between assimilation and accomodation?
Assimilation: interpreting new information in terms of our existing schemas Accommodation: adjusting our schemas to incorporate information provided by new experiences.
Why do young children, about 8 months old, develop stranger anxiety?
At this age, children have schemas for familiar faces. When they cannot assimilate the new face into these remembered schemas, they become distressed.
conditioned vs unconditioned
Conditioned is learned, unconditioned is unlearned and reflexive
What are the strengths and weaknesses of correlational studies/research?
Correlational studies show when two things often occur together. However, it does not explain why the two things occur together.
What is the difference between fixed interval and variable interval?
Fixed interval reinforces a response after a specific time period. Variable interval reinforces a response after varying time intervals.
What is the difference between fixed ratio and variable ratio?
Fixed ratio reinforces after a set number of responses. Variable ratio reinforces after an unpredictable number of responses.
What does the text say about how habits are formed?
Habits form when we repeat behaviors in a given context, and we start to associate the behavior with the context. Research says habits form after about 66 days.
preoperational stage
Learning to use language but not yet comprehending the mental operations of concrete logic age 2-6,7
What is the difference between punishment and reinforcement?
Punishment decreases a behavior, while reinforcement increases a behavior.
After one sperm has broken through the egg's coating and enters the egg, what happens next?
This triggers a series of chemical events that will cause the sperm and egg to fuse into a single cell. Then, that cell will subdivide again and again to emerge 9 months later as a human being.
What is the difference between classical conditioning and operant conditioning?
Through classical (Pavlovian) conditioning, we associate different stimuli we do not control, and we respond automatically (respondent behaviors). Through operant conditioning, we associate our own behaviors, which act on our environment to produce rewarding or punishing stimuli, with their consequences.
What is the relationship between shaping and the desired behavior?
When shaping, reinforcers guide behavior toward closer and closer approximations of the desired behavior
Babies are born with several reflexes for getting food. What does the text say about this? What would be characteristic of these reflexes?
When something touches a baby's cheek, they turn toward the touch, open their mouth, and hope for food. If it is food, they begin to suck. They also have startle and grasping reflexes.
basic idea of operant conditioning
a learned association between behaviors and their consequences
CR
a learned response to a previously neutral (now conditioned) stimulus
milestones of formal operational stage
abstract logic, potential for mature moral reasoning
classical conditioning processes
acquisition, extinction, spontaneous recovery, generalization, discrimination
teratogen
agents, such as chemicals and viruses, that can reach the embryo or fetus during prenatal development and cause harm
cognition
all the mental activities associated with thinking, knowing, remembering, and communicating
biopsychosocial
an integrated approach that incorporates biological, psychological, and social-cultural levels of analysis
CS
an originally neutral stimulus that, after association with an unconditioned stimulus (US), comes to trigger a conditioned response
positive reinforcer
any stimulus that, when presented after a response, strengthens the response
4 parenting styles
authoritarian, permissive, neglectful, authoritative
rites of passage
celebrations that mark the transition between childhood and adulthood
The once rigid sequence of the social clock has loosened. For example, _ can have lasting significance in how our lives turn out.
chance events
authoritarian parents
coercive; impose rules and expect obedience
authoritative parents
confrontive; both demanding and responsive; exert control by setting rules, but encourage open discussion and allow exceptions
milestones of concrete operational stage
conservation, mathematical transformations
formal operational stage
developing the ability to think abstractly age 12-adult
sensorimotor stage
experiencing the world through senses and actions age 0-2
Compared with teens and young adults, older adults have _ friendships and experience _ attachment anxiety.
fewer; less
Adolescents have a tendency to take risks because...
frontal lobe maturation lags behind emotional limbic system maturation. Puberty also causes a hormonal surge. Teens brains are biased toward immediate rewards.
4 lobes of the brain
frontal, parietal, occipital, temporal
concrete operational stage
gaining the mental operations that enable them to think logically about concrete events age 7-11
latent learning
learning that occurs but is not apparent until there is an incentive to demonstrate it
Among employed women, the task of raising children is most likely to be associated with _ marital satisfaction. The departure of mature children from the home is typically associated with _ marital satisfaction.
less; more
When 3-year-olds play hide and seek, what kind of behavior does it reflect?
object permanence
milestones of sensorimotor stage
object permanence, stranger anxiety
When you give your dog a treat for coming to you after you call his name, you are using...
positive reinforcement
delayed gratification
postponing an immediate reward to gain a greater one late
milestones of preoperational stage
pretend play, egocentrism
longitudinal research
research that follows and retests the same people over time
Children's sense that their parents are trustworthy and dependable is most indicative of...
secure attachment; basic trust
The developmental stage of adolescence is likely to be briefest in cultures where teens are...
self-supporting
We are especially likely to vicariously experience the reinforcing outcomes of those we perceive as...
successful, admirable, or similar to ourselves
extinction
the diminishing of a CR after a US does not follow a CS
acquisition
the initial stage, when one links a neutral stimulus and an unconditioned stimulus so that the neutral stimulus begins triggering the conditioned response
discrimination
the learned ability to distinguish between a CS and similar stimuli that do not signal a US
spontaneous recovery
the reappearance, after a pause, of an extinguished CR
generalization
the tendency, once a response has been conditioned, for stimuli similar to the CS to elicit similar responses
UR
unconditioned response an unlearned, naturally-occurring response to an unconditioned stimulus (US)
US
unconditioned stimulus a stimulus that unconditionally - naturally and automatically - triggers an unconditioned response (UR)
If children cannot grasp the principle of conservation, they are unable to...
understand that quantity remains the same despite changes in shape
neglectful parents
uninvolved; neither demanding nor responsive; careless and inattentive; do not seek a close relationship with their children
permissive parents
unrestraining; make few demands, set few limits, and use little punishment